Ennead VI
Sixth tractate: On numbers
Written by Plotinus, 250 AD
- 1. It is suggested that multiplicity is a falling away from The
Unity, infinity being the complete departure, an innumerable multiplicity, and
that this is why unlimit is an evil and we evil at the stage of multiplicity.
- A thing, in fact, becomes a manifold when, unable to remain
self-centred, it flows outward and by that dissipation takes extension: utterly
losing unity it becomes a manifold since there is nothing to bind part to part;
when, with all this outflowing, it becomes something definite, there is a
magnitude.
- But what is there so grievous in magnitude?
- Given consciousness, there will be, since the thing must feel its
exile, its sundrance from its essence. Everything seeks not the alien but
itself; in that outward moving there is frustration or compulsion; a thing most
exists not when it takes multiplicity or extension but when it holds to its own
being, that is when its movement is inward. Desire towards extension is
ignorance of the authentically great, a movement not on the appropriate path
but towards the strange; to the possession of the self the way is inward.
- Consider the thing that has taken extension; broken into so many
independent items, it is now those several parts and not the thing it was; if
that original is to persist, the members must stand collected to their total;
in other words, a thing is itself not by being extended but by remaining, in
its degree, a unity: through expansion and in the measure of the expansion, it
is less itself; retaining unity, it retains its essential being.
- Yet the universe has at once extension and beauty?
- Yes; because it has not been allowed to slip away into the limitless
but is held fast by unity; and it has beauty in virtue of Beauty not of
Magnitude; it needed Beauty to parry that magnitude; in the degree of its
extension it was void of beauty and to that degree ugly. Thus extension serves
as Matter to Beauty since what calls for its ordering is a multiplicity. The
greater the expansion, the greater the disorder and ugliness.
- 2. What, then, of the "Number of the Infinite"?
- To begin with, how is Number consistent with infinity?
- Objects of sense are not unlimited and therefore the Number applying
to them cannot be so. Nor is an enumerator able to number to infinity; though
we double, multiply over and over again, we still end with a finite number;
though we range over past and future, and consider them, even, as a totality,
we still end with the finite.
- Are we then to dismiss absolute limitlessness and think merely that
there is always something beyond?
- No; that more is not in the reckoner's power to produce; the total
stands already defined.
- In the Intellectual the Beings are determined and with them Number,
the number corresponding to their total; in this sphere of our own- as we make
a man a multiple by counting up his various characteristics, his beauty and the
rest- we take each image of Being and form a corresponding image of number; we
multiply a non-existent in and so produce multiple numbers; if we number years
we draw on the numbers in our own minds and apply them to the years; these
numbers are still our possession.
- 3. And there is the question How can the infinite have existence and
remain unlimited: whatever is in actual existence is by that very fact
determined numerically.
- But, first, if multiplicity holds a true place among Beings, how can
it be an evil?
- As existent it possesses unity; it is a unit-multiple, saved from
stark multiplicity; but it is of a lessened unity and, by that inwoven
multiplicity, it is evil in comparison with unity pure. No longer steadfast in
that nature, but fallen, it is the less, while in virtue of the unity thence
retained it keeps some value; multiplicity has value in so far as it tends to
return to, unity.
- But how explain the unlimited? It would seem that either it is among
beings and so is limited or, if unlimited, is not among beings but, at best,
among things of process such as Time. To be brought to limit it must be
unlimited; not the limited but the unlimited is the subject of limitation,
since between the limited and the unlimited there is no intermediate to accept
the principle of limitation. The unlimited recoils by very nature from the Idea
of limit, though it may be caught and held by it from without:- the recoil, of
course, is not from one place to another; the limitless can have nothing to do
with place which arises only with the limiting of the unlimited. Hence what is
known as the flux of the unlimited is not to be understood as local change; nor
does any other sort of recognisable motion belong to it in itself; therefore
the limitless cannot move: neither can it be at rest: in what, since all place
is later? Its movement means little more than that it is not fixed in rest.
- Is it, then, suspended at some one point, or rocking to and fro?
- No; any such poising, with or without side motion, could be known
only by place [which Matter precedes].
- How, then, are we to form any conception of its being?
- We must fasten on the bare notion and take what that gives us-
opposites that still are not opposed: we think of large and small and the
unlimited becomes either, of stationary and moving, and it will be either of
these. But primarily it can be neither in any defined degree, or at once it is
under limit. Limitless in this unlimited and undefined way, it is able to
appear as either of a pair of opposites: draw near, taking care to throw no net
of limit over it, and you have something that slips away; you come upon no
unity for so it would be defined; approach the thing as a unit, and you find it
manifold; call it a manifold, and again you falsify, for when the single thing
is not a unity neither is the total a manifold. In one manifestation it takes
the appearance of movement, in another of rest, as the mind envisages it.
- And there is movement in its lack of consciousness; it has passed out
of Intellectual-Principle, slid away. That it cannot break free but is under
compulsion from without to keep to its circling with no possibility of advance,
in this would be its rest. Thus it is not true to speak of Matter as being
solely in flux.
- 4. We have to enquire into the existence of the Numbers in the
Intellectual. Are they Ideas added to the other Ideas? Or are they no more than
necessary concomitants to the Ideas?
- In the latter case, Being, as the first [in the Intellectual] would
give us the conception of the Monad; then since Being produces motion and rest,
Three exists; and so on for all the other members of the realm of Being. Or
perhaps there is one monad for each member, or a monad for the first, with a
dyad for its next, since there exists a series, and a corresponding number for
every successive total, decad for ten, and so on.
- If, on the contrary, Number is a direct production of the
Intellectual-Principle [an Idea in itself], there is the question whether it
preceded or followed the other Ideas.
- Plato, where he says that men arrived at the conception of Number by
way of the changes of day and night- thus making the concept depend upon
variation among things- seems to hold that the things numerable precede and by
their differences produce number: Number then would consist in a process within
the human mind passing onwards from thing to thing; it results by the fact that
the mind takes count, that is when the mind traverses things and reports their
differences; observing pure identity unbroken by difference, it says One. But
there is the passage where he tells us that the veritable Number has Being, is
a Being; this is the opposed view that Number is no product of the reckoning
mind but a reality in itself, the concept of which is reawakened in the mind by
changes in things of sense.
- 5. What then is the veritable nature of Number?
- Is it an accompaniment upon each substance, something seen in the
things as in a man we see one man, in a being one being and in the total of
presentations the total of number?
- But how explain the dyad and triad? How comes the total to be unitary
and any particular number to be brought under unity? The theory offers a
multiplicity of units, and no number is reducible to unity but the simple
"one." It might be suggested that a dyad is that thing- or rather what is
observed upon that thing- which has two powers combined, a compound thing
related to a unity: or numbers might be what the Pythagoreans seem to hold them
in their symbolic system in which Justice, for example, is a Tetrad: but this
is rather to add the number, a number of manifold unity like the decad, to the
multiplicity of the thing which yet is one thing. Now it is not so that we
treat the ten things; we bring them together and apply the figure ten to the
several items. Or rather in that case we say ten, but when the several items
form a unity we say decad. This would apply in the Intellectual as in the
sensible.
- But how then can number, observed upon things, rank among Real
Beings?
- One answer might be that whiteness is similarly observed upon things
and yet is real, just as movement is observed upon things and there is still a
real existence of movement. But movement is not on a par with number: it is
because movement is an entity that unity can be observed upon it. Besides, the
kind of real existence thus implied annuls the reality of number, making it no
more than an attribute; but that cannot be since an attribute must exist before
it can be attributed; it may be inseparable from the subject but still must in
itself be something, some entity as whiteness is; to be a predicate it must be
that which is to be predicated. Thus if unity is observed in every subject, and
"one man" says more than "man's oneness being different from the manness and
common to all things- then this oneness must be something prior to man and to
all the rest: only so can the unity come to apply to each and to all: it must
therefore be prior also to even movement, prior to Being, since without unity
these could not be each one thing: of course what is here meant is not the
unity postulated as transcending Being but the unity predicable of the Ideas
which constitute each several thing. So too there is a decad prior to the
subject in which we affirm it; this prior would be the decad absolute, for
certainly the thing in which the decad is observed is not that absolute.
- Is this unity, then, connate and coexistent to the Beings? Suppose it
coexistent merely as an accidental, like health in man, it still must exist of
itself; suppose it present as an element in a compound, there must first exist
unity and the unity absolute that can thus enter into composition; moreover if
it were compounded with an object brought into being by its agency it would
make that object only spuriously a unity; its entry would produce a duality.
- But what of the decad? Where lies the need of decad to a thing which,
by totalling to that power, is decad already?
- The need may be like that of Form to Matter; ten and decad may exist
by its virtue; and, once more, the decad must previously exist of its own
existence, decad unattached.
- 6. Granted, then, that there exist, apart from things, a unity
absolute and a decad absolute in other words, that the Intellectual beings,
together with their characteristic essence have also their order, Henads,
Dyads, Triads, what is the nature of these numerical entities and how does it
come into being? We cannot but think that some reason accounts for their
origin.
- As a beginning, what is the origin of the Ideas in general? It is not
that the thinking principle thought of each Idea and by that act of thought
procured their several existences; not because Justice and Movement were thus
thought did they come to be; that would imply that while the thought is later
than the thing- the concept of Justice must be later than Justice itself- yet
the thought precedes what, as founded on the thinking, owes its existence to
it. Besides, if justice is only a certain definite thought we have the
absurdity that Justice is nothing more than a definition of Justice. Thinking
of Justice or Movement is but grasping their nature; this would mean grasping
the non-existent, an impossibility.
- We may be reminded that in immaterial objects the knowledge is
identical with the thing; but we must not misapply that statement; it does not
say that the knowledge is the thing known, or that the reason surveying the
thing is the thing, but that the immaterial thing, being an Intellectual object
is also a thought; this does not imply a definition or conception of the
object; the thing itself, as belonging to the Intellectual, can be nothing else
than Intellect or knowledge. This is not a case of knowledge self-directed; it
is that the thing in the Intellectual transmutes the knowledge, which is not
fixed like the knowledge of material things; in other words it makes it true
knowledge, that is to say no image of the thing but the thing directly.
- Thus it is not the conception of movement that brings movement to be;
movement absolute produces that conception; it produces itself as at once
movement and the concept of movement, for movement as it exists There, bound up
with Being, is a concept. It is movement absolute because it is the first
movement- there can be none till this exist- and it is the authentic Movement
since it is not accidental to something else but is the activity of actual
Being in motion. Thus it is a real existent, though the notion of Being is
different.
- Justice therefore is not the thought of Justice but, as we may put
it, a state of the Intellectual-Principle, or rather an activity of it- an
appearance so lovely that neither evening nor dawn is so fair, nor anything
else in all the realm of sense, an Intellectual manifestation self-rising,
self-seen, or, rather, self-being.
- 7. It is inevitably necessary to think of all as contained within one
nature; one nature must hold and encompass all; there cannot be as in the realm
of sense thing apart from thing, here a sun and elsewhere something else; all
must be mutually present within a unity. This is the very nature of the
Intellectual-Principle as we may know from soul which reproduces it and from
what we call Nature under which and by which the things of process are brought
into their disjointed being while that Nature itself remains indissolubly one.
- But within the unity There, the several entities have each its own
distinct existence; the all-embracing Intellect sees what is in it, what is
within Being; it need not look out upon them since it contains them, need not
separate them since they stand for ever distinct within it.
- Against doubters we cite the fact of participation; the greatness and
beauty of the Intellectual-Principle we know by the soul's longing towards it;
the longing of the rest towards soul is set up by its likeness to its higher
and to the possibility open to them of attaining resemblance through it.
- It is surely inconceivable that any living thing be beautiful failing
a Life-Absolute of a wonderful, an ineffable, beauty: this must be the
Collective Life, made up of all living things, or embracing all, forming a
unity coextensive with all, as our universe is a unity embracing all the
visible.
- 8. As then there is a Life-Form primal- which therefore is the
Life-Form Absolute- and there is Intellectual-Principle or Being, Authentic
Being, these, we affirm, contain all living things and all Number, and Absolute
Justice and Beauty and all of that order; for we ascribe an existence of their
own to Absolute Man, Absolute Number, Absolute Justice. It remains to discover,
in so far as such knowledge is possible, how these distinct entities come to be
and what is the manner of their being.
- At the outset we must lay aside all sense-perception; by
Intellectual-Principle we know Intellectual-Principle. We reflect within
ourselves there is life, there is intellect, not in extension but as power
without magnitude, issue of Authentic Being which is power self-existing, no
vacuity but a thing most living and intellective- nothing more living, more
intelligent, more real- and producing its effect by contact and in the ratio of
the contact, closely to the close, more remotely to the remote. If Being is to
be sought, then most be sought is Being at its intensest; so too the intensest
of Intellect if the Intellectual act has worth; and so, too, of Life.
- First, then, we take Being as first in order; then
Intellectual-Principle; then the Living-Form considered as containing all
things: Intellectual-Principle, as the Act of Real Being, is a second.
- Thus it is clear that Number cannot be dependent upon the Living-Form
since unity and duality existed before that; nor does it rise in the
Intellectual-Principle since before that there existed Real Being which is both
one and numerous.
- 9. It remains then to consider whether Being by its distinction
produced Number or Number produced that distinction. It is certain that either
Number was the cause of Being, movement, rest, identity and difference, or
these the cause of Number.
- The first question is whether Number can exist in and of itself or is
dependent upon things- Two being something observed in two things, Three in
three; and so of the arithmetical One, for if this could exist apart from
numbered objects it could exist also before the divisions of Being.
- But could it precede Being itself?
- For the present we must take it that Being precedes Number, is its
source. But if One means one being and the duality two beings, then unity
precedes Being, and Number precedes the Beings.
- Mentally, to our approach? Yes: and in reality of existence as well.
- Let us consider: When we think of the existence and the fine
appearance of a man as forming one thing, that unity is certainly thought of as
subsequent to a precedent duality; when we group a horse with a dog, the
duality is obviously the subsequent. But think of that which brings man or
horse or dog into being or produces them, with full intention, from where they
lie latent within itself: the producer must say "I begin with a first, I pass
on to a second; that makes two; counting myself there are three." Of course
there was no such numbering even of Beings for their production, since the due
number was known from the very beginning; but this consideration serves to show
that all Number precedes the very Beings themselves.
- But if Number thus preceded the Beings, then it is not included among
them?
- The truth is that it existed within the Authentic Being but not as
applying to it, for Being was still unparted; the potentiality of Number
existed and so produced the division within Being, put in travail with
multiplicity; Number must be either the substance of Being or its Activity; the
Life-Form as such and the Intellectual-Principle must be Number. Clearly Being
is to be, thought of as Number Collective, while the Beings are Number
unfolded: the Intellectual-Principle is Number moving within itself, while the
Living-Form is Number container of the universe. Even Being is the outcome of
the Unity, and, since the prior is unity, the secondary must be Number.
- Hence it is that the Forms have been described as Henads and Numbers.
This is the authentic Number; the other, the "monadic" is its image. The
Authentic is that made manifest in the Forms and helping to bring them to be;
primally it is the Number in the Authentic Being, inherent to it and preceding
the Beings, serving to them as root, fount, first principle.
- For the Unity is source to Being; Being's Being is stayed upon the
Unity as its safeguard from dissolution; the Unity cannot rest upon Being which
at that would be a unity before possessing unity; and so with the decad before
possessing decadhood.
- 10. When it takes lot with multiplicity, Being becomes Number by the
fact of awakening to manifoldness;- before, it was a preparation, so to speak,
of the Beings, their fore-promise, a total of henads offering a stay for what
was to be based upon them.
- Here with us a man will say "I wish I had such and such a quantity of
gold"- or "such and such a number of houses." Gold is one thing: the wish is
not to bring the numerical quantity into gold but to bring the gold to
quantity; the quantity, already present in the mind, is to be passed on to the
gold so that it acquire that numerical value.
- If the Beings preceded the number and this were discerned upon them
at the stirring, to such and such a total, of the numbering principle, then the
actual number of the Beings would be a chance not a choice; since that total is
not a matter of chance, Number is a causing principle preceding that determined
total.
- Number then pre-exists and is the cause by which produced things
participate in quantity.
- The single thing derives its unity by participation in
Unity-Absolute; its being it derives from Being-Absolute, which holds its Being
from itself alone; a unity is a unity in virtue of Being; the particular unity-
where the unity is a multiple unity- is one thing only as the Triad is; the
collective Being is a unity of this kind, the unity not of the monad but of the
myriad or any such collective number.
- Take a man affirming the presence of ten thousand things; it is he
that produces the number; he does not tell us that the ten thousand have
uttered it; they merely exhibit their several forms; the enumerator's mind
supplies the total which would never be known if the mind kept still.
- How does the mind pronounce?
- By being able to enumerate; that is by knowing Number: but in order
to this, Number must be in existence, and that that Principle should not know
its own total content is absurd, impossible.
- It is with Number as with Good. When we pronounce things to be good
either we mean that they are in their own nature so or we affirm goodness as an
accidental in them. Dealing with the primals, the goodness we have in mind is
that First Hypostasis; where the goodness is an accidental we imply the
existence of a Principle of Good as a necessary condition of the accidental
presence; there must be some source of that good which is observed elsewhere,
whether this source be an Absolute Good or something that of its own nature
produces the good. Similarly with number; in attributing the decad to things we
affirm either the truly existent decad or, where the decadhood is accidental,
we necessarily posit the self-subsistent decad, decad not associated; if things
are to be described as forming a decad, then either they must be of themselves
the decad or be preceded by that which has no other being than that of
decadhood.
- It must be urged as a general truth that anything affirmed of a
subject not itself either found its way in from outside or is the
characteristic Act of that subject; and supposing the predicated attribute to
show no variation of presence and absence but to be always present, then, if
the subject is a Real Being so also is the accidental in an equal degree; or,
failing Real Being, it at least belongs to the existents, it exists. In the
case when the subject can be thought of as remaining without its Act, yet that
Act is inbound with it even though to our minds it appears as a later; when on
the contrary the subject cannot be conceived without the attribute-man, for
example, without unity- then the attribute is either not later but concomitant
or, being essential to the existence, is precedent. In our view, Unity and
Number are precedent.
- 11. It may be suggested that the decad is nothing more than so many
henads; admitting the one henad why should we reject the ten? As the one is a
real existence why not the rest? We are certainly not compelled to attach that
one henad to some one thing and so deprive all the rest of the means to unity:
since every existent must be one thing, the unity is obviously common to all.
This means one principle applying to many, the principle whose existence within
itself we affirmed to be presupposed by its manifestation outside.
- But if a henad exists in some given object and further is observed in
something else, then that first henad being real, there cannot be only one
henad in existence; there must be a multiplicity of henads.
- Supposing that first henad alone to exist, it must obviously be
lodged either in the thing of completest Being or at all events in the thing
most completely a unity. If in the thing of completest Being, then the other
henads are but nominal and cannot be ranked with the first henad, or else
Number becomes a collection of unlike monads and there are differences among
monads [an impossibility]. If that first henad is to be taken as lodged in the
thing of completest unity, there is the question why that most perfect unity
should require the first henad to give it unity.
- Since all this is impossible, then, before any particular can be
thought of as a unit, there must exist a unity bare, unrelated by very essence.
If in that realm also there must be a unity apart from anything that can be
called one thing, why should there not exist another unity as well?
- Each particular, considered in itself, would be a manifold of monads,
totalling to a collective unity. If however Nature produces continuously- or
rather has produced once for all- not halting at the first production but
bringing a sort of continuous unity into being, then it produces the minor
numbers by the sheer fact of setting an early limit to its advance: outgoing to
a greater extent- not in the sense of moving from point to point but in its
inner changes- it would produce the larger numbers; to each number so emerging
it would attach the due quantities and the appropriate thing, knowing that
without this adaptation to Number the thing could not exist or would be a
stray, something outside, at once, of both Number and Reason.
- 12. We may be told that unity and monad have no real existence, that
the only unity is some definite object that is one thing, so that all comes to
an attitude of the mind towards things considered singly.
- But, to begin with, why at this should not the affirmation of Being
pass equally as an attitude of mind so that Being too must disappear? No doubt
Being strikes and stings and gives the impression of reality; but we find
ourselves just as vividly struck and impressed in the presence of unity.
Besides, is this attitude, this concept itself, a unity or a manifold? When we
deny the unity of an object, clearly the unity mentioned is not supplied by the
object, since we are saying it has none; the unity therefore is within
ourselves, something latent in our minds independently of any concrete one
thing.
- [An objector speaks-] "But the unity we thus possess comes by our
acceptance of a certain idea or impression from things external; it is a notion
derived from an object. Those that take the notion of numbers and of unity to
be but one species of the notions held to be inherent in the mind must allow to
numbers and to unity the reality they ascribe to any of the others, and upon
occasion they must be met; but no such real existence can be posited when the
concept is taken to be an attitude or notion rising in us as a by-product of
the objects; this happens when we say "This," "What," and still more obviously
in the affirmations "Crowd," "Festival," "Army," "Multiplicity." As
multiplicity is nothing apart from certain constituent items and the festival
nothing apart from the people gathered happily at the rites, so when we affirm
unity we are not thinking of some Oneness self-standing, unrelated. And there
are many other such cases; for instance "on the right," "Above" and their
opposites; what is there of reality about this "On-the-right-ness" but the fact
that two different positions are occupied? So with "Above": "Above" and "Below"
are a mere matter of position and have no significance outside of this sphere.
- Now in answer to this series of objections our first remark is that
there does exist an actuality implicit in each one of the relations cited;
though this is not the same for all or the same for correlatives or the same
for every reference to unity.
- But these objections must be taken singly.
- 13. It cannot reasonably be thought that the notion of unity is
derived from the object since this is physical- man, animal, even stone, a
presentation of that order is something very different from unity [which must
be a thing of the Intellectual]; if that presentation were unity, the mind
could never affirm unity unless of that given thing, man, for example.
- Then again, just as in the case of "On the right" or other such
affirmation of relation, the mind does not affirm in some caprice but from
observation of contrasted position, so here it affirms unity in virtue of
perceiving something real; assuredly the assertion of unity is not a bare
attitude towards something non-existent. It is not enough that a thing be alone
and be itself and not something else: and that very "something else" tells of
another unity. Besides Otherness and Difference are later; unless the mind has
first rested upon unity it cannot affirm Otherness or Difference; when it
affirms Aloneness it affirms unity-with-aloneness; thus unity is presupposed in
Aloneness.
- Besides, that in us which asserts unity of some object is first a
unity, itself; and the object is a unity before any outside affirmation or
conception.
- A thing must be either one thing or more than one, manifold: and if
there is to be a manifold there must be a precedent unity. To talk of a
manifold is to talk of what has something added to unity; to think of an army
is to think of a multitude under arms and brought to unity. In refusing to
allow the manifold to remain manifold, the mind makes the truth clear; it draws
a separate many into one, either supplying a unity not present or keen to
perceive the unity brought about by the ordering of the parts; in an army,
even, the unity is not a fiction but as real as that of a building erected from
many stones, though of course the unity of the house is more compact.
- If, then, unity is more pronounced in the continuous, and more again
where there is no separation by part, this is clearly because there exists, in
real existence, something which is a Nature or Principle of Unity. There cannot
be a greater and less in the non-existent: as we predicate Substance of
everything in sense, but predicate it also of the Intellectual order and more
strictly there- since we hold that the greater and more sovereign
substantiality belongs to the Real Beings and that Being is more marked in
Substance, even sensible Substance, than in the other Kinds- so, finding unity
to exhibit degree of more and less, differing in sense-things as well as in the
Intellectual, we must similarly admit that Unity exists under all forms though
still by reference, only, to that primal Unity.
- As Substance and Real Being, despite the participation of the
sensible, are still of the Intellectual and not the sensible order, so too the
unity observed present in things of sense by participation remains still an
Intellectual and to be grasped by an Intellectual Act. The mind, from a thing
present to it, comes to knowledge of something else, a thing not presented;
that is, it has a prior knowledge. By this prior knowledge it recognises Being
in a particular being; similarly when a thing is one it can affirm unity as it
can affirm also duality and multiplicity.
- It is impossible to name or conceive anything not making one or two
or some number; equally impossible that the thing should not exist without
which nothing can possibly be named or conceived; impossible to deny the
reality of that whose existence is a necessary condition of naming or affirming
anything; what is a first need, universally, to the formation of every concept
and every proposition must exist before reasoning and thinking; only as an
existent can it be cited to account for the stirring of thought. If Unity is
necessary to the substantial existence of all that really is- and nothing
exists which is not one- Unity must precede Reality and be its author. It is
therefore, an existent Unity, not an existent that develops Unity; considered
as Being-with-Unity it would be a manifold, whereas in the pure Unity there is
no Being save in so far as Unity attends to producing it. As regards the word
"This," it is nat a bare word; it affirms an indicated existence without using
the name, it tells of a certain presence, whether a substance or some other
existent; any This must be significant; it is no attitude of the mind applying
itself to a non-existent; the This shows a thing present, as much as if we used
the strict name of the object.
- 14. To the argument touching relation we have an answer surely
legitimate:
- The Unity is not of a nature to lose its own manner of being only
because something else stands in a state which it does not itself share; to
stray from its unity it must itself suffer division into duality or the still
wider plurality.
- If by division the one identical mass can become a duality without
loss of quantity, clearly the unity it possessed and by this destructive
division lost was something distinct. What may be alternatively present and
absent to the same subject must be classed among Real-Beings, regardless of
position; an accidental elsewhere, it must have reality in itself whether it be
manifested in things of sense or in the Intellectual- an accidental in the
Laters but self-existent in the higher, especially in the First in its aspect
of Unity developing into Being. We may be told that Unity may lose that
character without change in itself, becoming duality by association with
something else; but this is not true; unity does not become two things; neither
the added nor what takes the addition becomes two; each remains the one thing
it was; the duality is predicable of the group only, the unity remaining
unchanged in each of those unchanged constituents.
- Two and the Dyad are not essentially relative: if the only condition
to the construction of duality were meeting and association such a relation
might perhaps constitute Twoness and Duality; but in fact we see Duality
produced by the very opposite process, by the splitting apart of a unity. This
shows that duality- or any other such numerical form- is no relation produced
either by scission or association. If one configuration produces a certain
thing it is impossible that the opposite should produce the same so that the
thing may be identified with the relation.
- What then is the actual cause?
- Unity is due to the presence of Unity; duality to that of Duality; it
is precisely as things are white by Whiteness, just by Justice, beautiful by
Beauty. Otherwise we must reject these universals and call in relation here
also: justice would arise from a certain attitude in a given situation, Beauty
from a certain pattern of the person with nothing present able to produce the
beauty, nothing coming from without to effect that agreeable appearance.
- You see something which you pronounce to be a unity; that thing
possesses also size, form, and a host of other characteristics you might name;
size, bulk, sweetness, bitterness and other Ideas are actually present in the
thing; it surely cannot be thought that, while every conceivable quality has
Real-Being, quantity [Number] has not and that while continuous quantity
exists, discrete quantity does not and this though continuous quantity is
measured by the discrete. No: as size by the presence of Magnitude, and Oneness
by the presence of Unity, so with Duality and all the other numerical modes.
- As to the How of participation, the enquiry is that of all
participation in Ideal Forms; we must note, however, that the presence of the
Decad in the looser totals is different from its presence in the continuous;
there is difference again in its presence within many powers where multiplicity
is concentred in unity; arrived at the Intellectuals, there too we discover
Number, the Authentic Number, no longer entering the alien, Decad-Absolute not
Decad of some particular Intellectual group.
- 15. We must repeat: The Collective Being, the Authentic, There, is at
once Being and Intellectual-Principle and the Complete Living Form; thus it
includes the total of living things; the Unity There is reproduced by the unity
of this living universe in the degree possible to it- for the sense-nature as
such cannot compass that transcendental unity- thus that Living-All is
inevitably Number-Entire: if the Number were not complete, the All would be
deficient to the extent of some number, and if every number applicable to
living things were not contained in it, it would not be the all-comprehending
Life-Form. Therefore, Number exists before every living thing, before the
collective Life-Form.
- Again: Man exists in the Intellectual and with him all other living
things, both by possession of Real-Being and because that is the Life-Form
Complete. Even the man of this sphere is a member of the Intellectual since
that is the Life-Form Complete; every living thing by virtue of having life, is
There, There in the Life-form, and man is There also, in the Intellectual, in
so far as he is intellect, for all intelligences are severally members of That.
Now all this means Number There. Yet even in Intellect Number is not present
primally; its presence There is the reckoning of the Acts of
Intellectual-Principle; it tallies with the justice in Intellectual-Principle,
its moral wisdom, its virtues, its knowledge, all whose possession makes That
Principle what it is.
- But knowledge- must not this imply presence to the alien? No;
knowledge, known and knower are an identity; so with all the rest; every member
of Intellectual-Principle is therefore present to it primally; justice, for
example, is not accidental to it as to soul in its character as soul, where
these virtues are mainly potential becoming actual by the intention towards
Intellectual-Principle and association with it.
- Next we come to Being, fully realized, and this is the seat of
Number; by Number, Being brings forth the Beings; its movement is planned to
Number; it establishes the numbers of its offspring before bringing them to be,
in the same way as it establishes its own unity by linking pure Being to the
First: the numbers do not link the lower to the First; it suffices that Being
is so linked; for Being, in taking form as Number, binds its members to itself.
As a unity, it suffers no division, remaining self-constant; as a thing of
division, containing its chosen total of members, it knows that total and so
brings forth Number, a phase therefore of its content: its development of part
is ruled by the powers of Number, and the Beings it produces sum to that
Number. Thus Number, the primal and true, is Principle and source of actuality
to the Beings.
- Hence it is that in our sphere, also, Number accompanies the coming
to be of particular things and to suppose another number than the actual is to
suppose the production of something else or of nothing.
- These then are the primal numbers; they are numerable; the numbers of
the other order are of a double character; as derived from the first numbers
they are themselves numerable but as acting for those first they are measures
of the rest of things, numbering numbers and numerables. For how could they
declare a Decad save in the light of numbers within themselves?
- 16. But here we may be questioned about these numbers which we
describe as the primal and authentic:
- "Where do you place these numbers, in what genus among Beings? To
everyone they seem to come under Quantity and you have certainly brought
Quantity in, where you say that discrete Quantity equally with the continuous
holds place among Beings; but you go on to say that there are the numbers
belonging to the Firsts and then talk of other numbers quite distinct, those of
reckoning; tell us how you arrange all this, for there is difficulty here. And
then, the unity in sense-things- is that a quantity or is quantity here just so
many units brought together, the unity being the starting-point of quantity but
not quantity itself? And, if the starting-point, is it a kindred thing or of
another genus? All this you owe it to us to make clear."
- Be it so; we begin by pointing out a distinction:
- You take one thing with another- for we must first deal with objects
of sense- a dog and a man, or two men; or you take a group and affirm ten, a
decad of men: in this case the number affirmed is not a Reality, even as
Reality goes in the sphere of sense, but is purely Quantity: similarly when you
resolve into units, breaking up the decad, those units are your principle of
Quantity since the single individual is not a unity absolute.
- But the case is different when you consider one man in himself and
affirm a certain number, duality, for example, in that he is at once living and
reasoning.
- By this analysis and totalling, you get quantity; but there are two
objects under consideration and each of these is one; each of the unities
contributes to the complete being and the oneness is inherent in each; this is
another kind of number; number essential; even the duality so formed is no
posterior; it does not signify a quantity apart from the thing but the quantity
in the essence which holds the thing together. The number here is no mere
result of your detailing; the things exist of themselves and are not brought
together by your reckoning, but what has it to do with essential reality that
you count one man in with another? There is here no resultant unity such as
that of a choir- the decad is real only to you who count the ten; in the ten of
your reckoning there cannot be a decad without a unitary basis; it is you that
make the ten by your counting, by fixing that tenness down to quantity; in
choir and army there is something more than that, something not of your
placing.
- But how do you come to have a number to place?
- The Number inherent apart from any enumeration has its own manner of
being, but the other, that resulting upon the appearance of an external to be
appraised by the Number within yourself, is either an Act of these inherent
numbers or an Act in accordance with them; in counting we produce number and so
bring quantity into being just as in walking we bring a certain movement into
being.
- But what of that "Number within us having its own manner of being"?
- It is the Number of our essence. "Our essence" we read "partakes of
Number and harmony and, also, is Number and harmony." "Neither body nor
magnitude," someone says: soul, then, is Number since it is essence. The number
belonging to body is an essence of the order of body; the number belonging to
soul constitutes the essences of souls.
- In the Intellectuals, all, if the Absolute Living-Form, there is a
multiple- a triad, let us say- that Triad of the Living-Form is of the nature
of essence: and the Triad prior to any living thing, Triad in the realm of
Being, is a principle of essence.
- When you enumerate two things- say, animal and beauty- each of these
remains one thing; the number is your production; it lay within yourself; it is
you that elaborate quantity, here the dyad. But when you declare virtue to be a
Tetrad, you are affirming a Tetrad which does actually exist; the parts, so to
speak, make one thing; you are taking as the object of your act a Unity- Tetrad
to which you accommodate the Tetrad within yourself.
- 17. But what of the Infinite Number we hear of; does not all this
reasoning set it under limit?
- And rightly so if the thing is to be a number; limitlessness and
number are in contradiction.
- How, then, do we come to use the term? Is it that we think of Number
as we think of an infinite line, not with the idea that any such lire exists
but that even the very greatest- that of the [path of the] universe, for
example- may be thought of as still greater? So it might be with number; let it
be fixed, yet we still are free to think of its double, though not of course to
produce the doubled quantity since it is impossible to join to the actual what
is no more than a conception, a phantasm, private to ourselves.
- It is our view that there does exist an infinite line, among the
Intellectual Beings: for There a line would not be quantitative and being
without quantity could be numerically infinite. This however would be in
another mode than that of limitless extension. In what mode then? In that the
conception of the Absolute Line does not include the conception of limit.
- But what sort of thing is the Line in the Intellectual and what place
does it hold?
- It is later than Number since unity is observed in it; it rises at
one point and traverses one course and simply lacks the quantity that would be
the measure of the distance.
- But where does this thing lie? Is it existent only in the defining
thought, so to speak?
- No; it is also a thing, though a thing of the Intellectual. All that
belongs to that order is at once an Intellectual and in some degree the
concrete thing. There is a position, as well as a manner of being, for all
configurations, for surface, for solid. And certainly the configurations are
not of our devising; for example, the configurations of the universe are
obviously antecedent to ourselves; so it must be with all the configurations of
the things of nature; before the bodily reproductions all must exist There,
without configuration, primal configurations. For these primals are not shapes
in something; self-belonging, they are perfect without extension; only the
extended needs the external. In the sphere of Real-Being the configuration is
always a unity; it becomes discrete either in the Living-Form or immediately
before: I say "becomes discrete" not in the sense that it takes magnitude There
but that it is broken apart for the purpose of the Living-Form and is allotted
to the bodies within that Form- for instance, to Fire There, the Intellectual
Pyramid. And because the Ideal-Form is There, the fire of this sphere seeks to
produce that configuration against the check of Matter: and so of all the rest
as we read in the account of the realm of sense.
- But does the Life-Form contain the configurations by the mere fact of
its life?
- They are in the Intellectual-Principle previously but they also exist
in the Living-Form; if this be considered as including the
Intellectual-Principle, then they are primally in the Life-Form, but if that
Principle comes first then they are previously in that. And if the Life-Form
entire contains also souls, it must certainly be subsequent to the
Intellectual-Principle.
- No doubt there is the passage "Whatever Intellect sees in the entire
Life-Form"; thus seeing, must not the Intellectual-Principle be the later?
- No; the seeing may imply merely that the reality comes into being by
the fact of that seeing; the Intellectual-Principle is not external to the
Life-Form; all is one; the Act of the Intellectual-Principle possesses itself
of bare sphere, while the Life-Form holds the sphere as sphere of a living
total.
- 18. It appears then that Number in that realm is definite; it is we
that can conceive the "More than is present"; the infinity lies in our
counting: in the Real is no conceiving more than has been conceived; all stands
entire; no number has been or could be omitted to make addition possible. It
might be described as infinite in the sense that it has not been measured- who
is there to measure it?- but it is solely its own, a concentrated unit, entire,
not ringed round by any boundary; its manner of being is settled for it by
itself alone. None of the Real-Beings is under limit; what is limited,
measured, is what needs measure to prevent it running away into the unbounded.
There every being is Measure; and therefore it is that all is beautiful.
Because that is a living thing it is beautiful, holding the highest life, the
complete, a life not tainted towards death, nothing mortal there, nothing
dying. Nor is the life of that Absolute Living-Form some feeble flickering; it
is primal, the brightest, holding all that life has of radiance; it is that
first light which the souls There draw upon for their life and bring with them
when they come here. It knows for what purpose it lives, towards What it lives,
from Whence it lives; for the Whence of its life is the Whither... and close
above it stands the wisdom of all, the collective Intellectual-Principle, knit
into it, one with it, colouring it to a higher goodness, by kneading wisdom
into it, making its beauty still more august. Even here the august and
veritably beautiful life is the life in wisdom, here dimly seen, There purely.
For There wisdom gives sight to the seer and power for the fuller living and in
that tenser life both to see and to become what is seen.
- Here attention is set for the most part upon the unliving and, in the
living, upon what is lifeless in them; the inner life is taken only with alloy:
There, all are Living Beings, living wholly, unalloyed; however you may choose
to study one of them apart from its life, in a moment that life is flashed out
upon you: once you have known the Essence that pervades them, conferring that
unchangeable life upon them, once you perceive the judgement and wisdom and
knowledge that are theirs, you can but smile at all the lower nature with its
pretention to Reality.
- In virtue of this Essence it is that life endures, that the
Intellectual-Principle endures, that the Beings stand in their eternity;
nothing alters it, turns it, moves it; nothing, indeed, is in being besides it
to touch it; anything that is must be its product; anything opposed to it could
not affect it. Being itself could not make such an opposite into Being; that
would require a prior to both and that prior would then be Being; so that
Parmenides was right when he taught the identity of Being and Unity. Being is
thus beyond contact not because it stands alone but because it is Being. For
Being alone has Being in its own right.
- How then can we deny to it either Being or anything at all that may
exist effectively, anything that may derive from it?
- As long as it exists it produces: but it exists for ever; so,
therefore, do its products. And so great is it in power and beauty that it
remains the allurer, all things of the universe depending from it and rejoicing
to hold their trace of it and through that to seek their good. To us, existence
is before the good; all this world desires life and wisdom in order to Being;
every soul and every intellect seeks to be its Being, but Being is sufficient
to itself.
Essene Nazarean Church of Mount Carmel
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